Forecast
in sentence
463 examples of Forecast in a sentence
African agricultural output is
forecast
to reach $1 trillion by 2030.
There are, of course, serious downside risks to this forecast, especially if the fiscal deficit remains high or adverse tax policies depress the rise in productivity.
When the coalition government came to office three years ago, the United Kingdom’s deficit was
forecast
to be higher than that of any other country in the G-20, at more than 11% of GDP.
As a result, the International Monetary Fund’s latest
forecast
has revised upward UK growth – and more so than for any other G-7 economy.
China’s cities are
forecast
to spend around $5.3 trillion on infrastructure over the next 15 years; but denser, more efficient cities would save around $1.4 trillion (15% of 2013 GDP) of these costs.
Observers seize upon every new piece of economic data to
forecast
QE’s continuation or an acceleration of its decline.
During the synchronized global upswing last year, many in the economic establishment spoke too soon when they began to
forecast
sunnier times.
Governments will need new accounting and reporting standards to calculate wages,
forecast
incomes, and categorize workers within the growing ranks of the self-employed.
A new
forecast
for 2025 being prepared by the US National Intelligence Council projects that American dominance will be “much diminished,” and that the one key area of continued American superiority – military power – will be less significant in the competitive world of the future.
It is not just that the profession didn’t
forecast
the crisis.
The International Monetary Fund upgraded the GDP growth outlook of all six of the top ten oil producers that were shown separately in its 2018
forecast
update, and the projected growth of world trade volumes was raised half a percentage point this year and next.
But the costs are too high to be impulsive, and the storms of political Islam are difficult to
forecast.
Google the weather where you live and you will get the
forecast
for the next few days as the top result, saving you time and effort.
For eight years, it never stopped forecasting that the budget would return to surplus by 2011, even though virtually every independent
forecast
showed that deficits would continue into the new decade unabated.
Indeed, the ECB’s own
forecast
has inflation falling in the second half of 2012 and again in 2013, suggesting that it has monetary room for maneuver.
Nouriel Roubini, who famously
forecast
the 2008 financial crisis, agrees that “a correction has already occurred in emerging markets, limiting the need for further adjustment when the Fed moves.”
Some argue that the CBO’s initial
forecast
of the impact of repealing the individual mandate was overly dire, and that many Americans will purchase insurance even in the absence of a penalty.
The OECD just became the latest international agency to downgrade its global growth forecast, from 3.7% to 3.5% in 2019 and 2020.
Investors have no way to
forecast
the impact of policies, because policies thought to be headed one way suddenly veer in the opposite direction.
So here’s a forecast: there will be no shortage of predictions that 2012 is shaping up as a disastrous year.
The output gap in advanced economies has all but disappeared, inflation is picking up, and world economic growth is
forecast
to be its strongest since 2010.
Europe’s Franco-German Dream TeamPARIS – When the International Monetary Fund lowered its global growth
forecast
for 2014 and 2015 from 3.7% and 3.9%, respectively, to 3.3% and 3.8%, it cited the eurozone’s increasingly gloomy prospects, including significantly slower growth in Germany, as a leading cause.
Former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi emerged as a half-winner, not as a political corpse, as many had
forecast
and much of the world had hoped.
In Latin America, Chinese officials have
forecast
$250 billion in new infrastructure deals.
In its 2011 forecast, the International Monetary Fund predicted that the European economy would grow by 2.1% in 2012.
In the United Kingdom, the 2010
forecast
of the Office for Budget Responsibility (OBR) projected 2.6% growth in 2011 and 2.8% growth in 2012; in fact, the UK economy grew by 0.9% in 2011 and will flat-line in 2012.
The OECD’s latest
forecast
for eurozone GDP in 2012 is 2.3% lower than its projection in 2010.
In July, the International Monetary Fund revised its global growth
forecast
downward for the second time this year.
My own
forecast
assumes an even greater rise in the debt level, owing to continued increases in government spending and extensions of recent reductions in personal income tax.
Population change happens slowly, but its effects can be
forecast
early.
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